From the course: Learning the Arturia Collection

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Sculpting the Vox Continental V organ

Sculpting the Vox Continental V organ - Pro Tools Tutorial

From the course: Learning the Arturia Collection

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Sculpting the Vox Continental V organ

- [Instructor] Let's dive in and look at some of the features that make the VOX Continental V so unique. So just like our Hammond, we have an upper and lower manual, and we have lower and upper draw bars to sculpt and shape the sound by introducing different harmonics, and then finally you'll notice that we also have some draw bars for the bass, and that's located directly to the left of the lower manual draw bars. Now, what's interesting about that is in this case, for the lower, upper, and for the bass, we have a sine wave output per draw bar, which is also known as the flute stop. And then we have M, or our filtered square wave output per draw bar, which is labeled as the reed stop. Now, what's interesting about these, is they were sort of crude filters to shape the sound, in a way that, I guess we don't think of filters very much in the same way today. 'Cause filters have become so precise, with things like resonance, and very specific cutoff. These just introduce some wave shapes…

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